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Summary[
edit] Description: Polski: Drymonia ruficornis Dąbrówka chaonia Łódź (Polska). Date: 25 April 2018, 21:35:27. Source: Own work. Author:
Jerzy Strzelecki.
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Description: English: Drymonia velitaris, caterpillar. Date: 24 November 2008. Source:
: This image is
Image Number 5371388 at
Insect Images, a source for entomological images operated by
The Bugwood Network at the University of Georgia and the
USDA Forest Service.. Author: Gyorgy Csoka, Hungary Forest Research Institute, Bugwood.org. Permission (
Reusing this file): : This file is licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States license.:. You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work to remix – to adapt the work Under the following conditions: attribution – You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/deed.en CC BY 3.0 us Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 us truetrue.
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: Drymonia dodonaea. Date: 02.06.2018. Source: Own work. Author:
AfroBrazilian.
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janetgraham84new|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/149164524@N06/35109656785%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200501153944/https://flickr.com/photos/149164524@N06/35109656785%7Creviewdate=2017-10-30 19:41:25|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
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Summary[
edit] Description: Deutsch: Dunkelgrauer Zahnspinner (Drymonia ruficornis), Naturschutzgebiet Riddaghausen bei Braunschweig, Buchhorst Süd. Date: 20 April 2014, 01:41:06. Source: Own work. Author:
Donkey shot (C. Bobzin).
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France Trip - Las Descargues - 27/06/16 to 01/07/16 - Part One - Macro's Hello all. I recently got back from a really enjoyable 5 nights of Moth trapping, Butterfly and Bird watching in the Midi-Pyrenees. I went with good friends Roger and Steve whom accompany me on many trips out in our County of Hertfordshire. It was decided at the end of last year that we should go for a short week away to sample some of the Moths that would be on offer in South-West France. The article below is copied from Robin Howard's Lot Moths website. He describes it perfectly so I didn't feel the need to re-write it! "The Gite that we stayed in lies in a stunningly beautiful part of the Haute Quercy in the Lot southwest France. Located at the end of a ridge overlooking the Bave Valley it is surrounded by rolling, wooded hills, deep, river-cut gorges and on the nearby Causse, limestone pavement. The proximity of the limestone Causse de Gramat and volcanic Massif Central have produced a complex local geology that has formed the basis for a mosaic of habitats supporting a diverse flora with a rich moth and butterfly fauna. Over 1820 species have been recorded so far from the immediate area with more than 1600 species taken from the environs of the farm alone. Mercury vapour and actinic traps are run throughout the year in and around the farm with weekly forays made onto the limestone pavement and local poplar plantations, whilst the nearby volcanic peaks are regularly visited during the summer months for the more esoteric species. For further information regarding holidays and research opportunities at our farm and for a full description of the area and available accommodation please visit our sister site at
www.lasdescargues.com or email us for a comprehensive information pack". Robin and Sue are both fantastic hosts and could not do enough for you, I urge anyone to go there and experience the amazing wildlife that is on offer there. The species site list is in excess of an incredible 2000 species of Moth! In 16 years that is incredible, and shows how special this habitat really is. Our target was 300 species and with over 200 Macro's we may just get to the 300 mark with the Micro's still to sort. We ran 2 static traps in the garden (Both MV 125s) and I brought my 160w MBT Blended bulb on a tripod. We then had access to a further two traps, an MV Robinson and an Actinic Midi-Robinson which we could take further afield, in fact we tried three further sites. Macro Moths listed so far... Species in red are completely new to me The Micro's are still pending and a lot are so far unnamed! 212 Species Adactylotis contaminaria Alchymist Alder Kitten Alder Moth Alychmist Anaplectoides prasina Angle Shades Angle-striped Sallow Atypha pulmonaris Balsam Carpet Barred Hook-tip Barred Red Barred Yellow (only at Causse) Beautiful Golden-Y Beautiful Hook-tip Bird's Wing Black Arches Black V-moth Blood-vein Bordered Beauty Bright-line Brown-eye Brimstone Moth Brindled White-spot Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Broken-barred Carpet Brown Rustic Brown Silver-lines Brussels Lace Buff Arches Buff Ermine Buff Footman Buff-tip Burnished Brass Caradrina aspersa Chequered Wave Clay Fan-foot Clouded Border Clouded Magpie Clouded Silver Common Carpet Common Emerald Common Footman Common Wainscot Common White Wave Coronet Cream Wave Cream-spot Tiger Dagger sp Dark Arches Dark Umber Delicate Dingy Footman Double Square-spot Double-striped Pug Dun-bar Dwarf Cream Wave Eastern Bordered Straw Elephant Hawk-moth Engrailed sp Fan-foot Feathered Footman Festoon Fiery Clearwing Flame Flame Shoulder Four-dotted Footman (only at Causse) Four-spotted Footman Fox Moth Foxglove Pug Gnophos furcatus Goat Moth Grass Emerald Great Oak Beauty Green Arches Green Pug Green Silver-lines Grey Arches Grey Pug Grey-pine Carpet Guernsey Underwing Handmaid Heart & Club Heart & Dart Heart Moth Herald Hoary Footman Hoplodrina respersa Horse Chestnut Humming-bird Hawk-moth Idaea deversaria Idaea macilentaria Idaea moniliata Idia calvaria Iron Prominent Isle of Wight Wave Ivory Footman Jubilee Fan-foot Lace Border Lackey Lamprosticta culta Large Emerald Large Yellow Underwing Latin Latticed Heath Least Carpet Least Carpet Leopard Moth Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Lesser Cream Wave Lesser Swallow Prominent Lesser Treble-bar Lesser Yellow Underwing Lewes Wave Light Emerald Lilac Beauty Lobster Moth Lycophotia erythrina Marbled Brown Marbled Minor Marbled White-spot Mediterranean lace border Miller Minor Shoulder-knot Mottled Rustic Nut-tree Tussock Oak Hawk-moth Oak Hook-tip Orache Moth Orange Footman Orange Moth Pale Mottled Willow Pale Oak Beauty Pale Oak Beauty Pale Shoulder Passenger Peach Blossom Pebble Prominent Pebble Prominent Peppered Moth Perigune narbonea Perizoma lugdunaria Petrophora narbonea Phalera bucephaloides Pine Hawk-moth Pine Processionary Pine-tree Lappet Plain Wave Plum Lappet Poplar Lappet Portland Riband Wave Powdered Rustic Privet Hawk-moth Purple Bar Red-necked Footman Rhodostrophia calabra Riband Wave Rosy Footman Rosy Marbled Ruby Tiger Rufous Minor Rustic Scallop Shell Scarce Blackneck Scarce Footman Scarce Merveille du-jour Scarce Silver-lines Scarlet Tiger Scorched Carpet Scorched Wing September Thorn Setaceous Hebrew Character Shaded Annulet Shaded Fan-foot Shark Shears Short-cloaked Moth (only at Causse) Silver-Y Single-dotted Wave Single-dotted Wave Small Angle Shades Small Blood-vein Small Dusty Wave Small Emerald Small Fan-foot Small Fan-footed Wave Small Purple-barred Small Ranunculus Small White Wave Snout Southern Wainscot Speckled Beauty Speckled Yellow Spectacle Straw Belle Swallow-tailed Moth Swarthy Annulet Tawny Prominent Tawny Wave Tawny-barred Angle Tephronia sepiaria Toadflax Brocade Treble Brown Spot Turnip Moth Uncertain Vine's Rustic V-moth V-Pug White Ermine White-point Willow Beauty Yellow Shell Yellow-tail
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Exemplar found: Russia, Moscow Oblast, Odintsovsky District, near village Pestovo, 20.06.2018, by light МО, Одинцовский р-н, окрестности деревни Пестово, 20.06.2018, на свет
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France Trip - Las Descargues - 27/06/16 to 01/07/16 - Part One - Macro's Hello all. I recently got back from a really enjoyable 5 nights of Moth trapping, Butterfly and Bird watching in the Midi-Pyrenees. I went with good friends Roger and Steve whom accompany me on many trips out in our County of Hertfordshire. It was decided at the end of last year that we should go for a short week away to sample some of the Moths that would be on offer in South-West France. The article below is copied from Robin Howard's Lot Moths website. He describes it perfectly so I didn't feel the need to re-write it! "The Gite that we stayed in lies in a stunningly beautiful part of the Haute Quercy in the Lot southwest France. Located at the end of a ridge overlooking the Bave Valley it is surrounded by rolling, wooded hills, deep, river-cut gorges and on the nearby Causse, limestone pavement. The proximity of the limestone Causse de Gramat and volcanic Massif Central have produced a complex local geology that has formed the basis for a mosaic of habitats supporting a diverse flora with a rich moth and butterfly fauna. Over 1820 species have been recorded so far from the immediate area with more than 1600 species taken from the environs of the farm alone. Mercury vapour and actinic traps are run throughout the year in and around the farm with weekly forays made onto the limestone pavement and local poplar plantations, whilst the nearby volcanic peaks are regularly visited during the summer months for the more esoteric species. For further information regarding holidays and research opportunities at our farm and for a full description of the area and available accommodation please visit our sister site at
www.lasdescargues.com or email us for a comprehensive information pack". Robin and Sue are both fantastic hosts and could not do enough for you, I urge anyone to go there and experience the amazing wildlife that is on offer there. The species site list is in excess of an incredible 2000 species of Moth! In 16 years that is incredible, and shows how special this habitat really is. Our target was 300 species and with over 200 Macro's we may just get to the 300 mark with the Micro's still to sort. We ran 2 static traps in the garden (Both MV 125s) and I brought my 160w MBT Blended bulb on a tripod. We then had access to a further two traps, an MV Robinson and an Actinic Midi-Robinson which we could take further afield, in fact we tried three further sites. Macro Moths listed so far... Species in red are completely new to me The Micro's are still pending and a lot are so far unnamed! 212 Species Adactylotis contaminaria Alchymist Alder Kitten Alder Moth Alychmist Anaplectoides prasina Angle Shades Angle-striped Sallow Atypha pulmonaris Balsam Carpet Barred Hook-tip Barred Red Barred Yellow (only at Causse) Beautiful Golden-Y Beautiful Hook-tip Bird's Wing Black Arches Black V-moth Blood-vein Bordered Beauty Bright-line Brown-eye Brimstone Moth Brindled White-spot Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Broken-barred Carpet Brown Rustic Brown Silver-lines Brussels Lace Buff Arches Buff Ermine Buff Footman Buff-tip Burnished Brass Caradrina aspersa Chequered Wave Clay Fan-foot Clouded Border Clouded Magpie Clouded Silver Common Carpet Common Emerald Common Footman Common Wainscot Common White Wave Coronet Cream Wave Cream-spot Tiger Dagger sp Dark Arches Dark Umber Delicate Dingy Footman Double Square-spot Double-striped Pug Dun-bar Dwarf Cream Wave Eastern Bordered Straw Elephant Hawk-moth Engrailed sp Fan-foot Feathered Footman Festoon Fiery Clearwing Flame Flame Shoulder Four-dotted Footman (only at Causse) Four-spotted Footman Fox Moth Foxglove Pug Gnophos furcatus Goat Moth Grass Emerald Great Oak Beauty Green Arches Green Pug Green Silver-lines Grey Arches Grey Pug Grey-pine Carpet Guernsey Underwing Handmaid Heart & Club Heart & Dart Heart Moth Herald Hoary Footman Hoplodrina respersa Horse Chestnut Humming-bird Hawk-moth Idaea deversaria Idaea macilentaria Idaea moniliata Idia calvaria Iron Prominent Isle of Wight Wave Ivory Footman Jubilee Fan-foot Lace Border Lackey Lamprosticta culta Large Emerald Large Yellow Underwing Latin Latticed Heath Least Carpet Least Carpet Leopard Moth Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Lesser Cream Wave Lesser Swallow Prominent Lesser Treble-bar Lesser Yellow Underwing Lewes Wave Light Emerald Lilac Beauty Lobster Moth Lycophotia erythrina Marbled Brown Marbled Minor Marbled White-spot Mediterranean lace border Miller Minor Shoulder-knot Mottled Rustic Nut-tree Tussock Oak Hawk-moth Oak Hook-tip Orache Moth Orange Footman Orange Moth Pale Mottled Willow Pale Oak Beauty Pale Oak Beauty Pale Shoulder Passenger Peach Blossom Pebble Prominent Pebble Prominent Peppered Moth Perigune narbonea Perizoma lugdunaria Petrophora narbonea Phalera bucephaloides Pine Hawk-moth Pine Processionary Pine-tree Lappet Plain Wave Plum Lappet Poplar Lappet Portland Riband Wave Powdered Rustic Privet Hawk-moth Purple Bar Red-necked Footman Rhodostrophia calabra Riband Wave Rosy Footman Rosy Marbled Ruby Tiger Rufous Minor Rustic Scallop Shell Scarce Blackneck Scarce Footman Scarce Merveille du-jour Scarce Silver-lines Scarlet Tiger Scorched Carpet Scorched Wing September Thorn Setaceous Hebrew Character Shaded Annulet Shaded Fan-foot Shark Shears Short-cloaked Moth (only at Causse) Silver-Y Single-dotted Wave Single-dotted Wave Small Angle Shades Small Blood-vein Small Dusty Wave Small Emerald Small Fan-foot Small Fan-footed Wave Small Purple-barred Small Ranunculus Small White Wave Snout Southern Wainscot Speckled Beauty Speckled Yellow Spectacle Straw Belle Swallow-tailed Moth Swarthy Annulet Tawny Prominent Tawny Wave Tawny-barred Angle Tephronia sepiaria Toadflax Brocade Treble Brown Spot Turnip Moth Uncertain Vine's Rustic V-moth V-Pug White Ermine White-point Willow Beauty Yellow Shell Yellow-tail
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: Drymonia dodonaea, insect collections SLU, Uppsala. Date: 10 July 2012, 13:49:20. Source: Own work. Author:
Vítězslav Maňák (SLU).
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Bennyboymothman|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/39971303180%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200525195141/https://www.flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/39971303180%7Creviewdate=2018-09-26 20:15:00|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[
edit] Description: 4 new for year's last Saturday.. Lead-coloured Drab finally Last Saturday the weather was quite favourable with little wind and warm temperatures so the trap again went on in the garden. Four new for year moths were added to the year list. I thought I had missed out on Lead-coloured Drab this year but luckily a very pale brown one turned up nearly at last knockings. 4 Lunar Marbled Brown was great, last year I recorded only one with was a first for the garden. To get 4 in one night was quite special. Notables listed below. Catch Report - 21/04/18 - Back Garden - Stevenage - 1x 125w MV Robinson Trap Macro Moths Lead-coloured Drab 1 [NFY] Lunar Marbled Brown 4 [NFY] Powdered Quaker 1 [NFY] Red-green Carpet 1 [NFY] Micro Moths Dyseriocrania subpurpurella 5. Date: 23 April 2018, 16:55. Source:
Lunar Marbled Brown. Author:
Ben Sale from Stevenage, UK.
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"Longitude (deg): 1.2. Latitude (deg): 52.6. Longitude (deg/min): 1ð 10' E. Latitude (deg/min): 52ð 40' N. Vice county name: East Norfolk. Vice county no.: 27. Country: England. Identified by: Raymond Watson. Comment: in MV trap. Category: macro-photograph. Image scaling: enlarged. Photographic equipment used: ""35mm transparencies (on a variety of films, but Agfa CT18 in the 1960's to early 1980's followed by Fujichrome in the late 1980's.) Transparencies scanned with Minolta Dimage Scan Dual II AF-2820U transparency scanner."". "
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Trip to Las Descargues 8th August - 18th August - Macro Moths I made a trip back to Robin Howard's beautiful place in the Midi-pyrenees with my wife on the second week of August. We planned to stay over our anniversary but we were unsure of what the weather would be like, so very opted for a slightly longer stay of 10 days incase the weather wasn't too good. We are very glad that we did as the first 4 days were quite wet and windy and with daytime temperatures not getting much higher than 18 degrees, it felt like the trip back in June al over again! Thankfully by Saturday the temperature had recovered and we were enjoying the sunshine finally and by Monday we made use of the stunning swimming pool that we had all to ourselves (although it was quite cold and took your breathe away). Typically on the last day (Thursday) it was really warm and the pool felt a bit warmer so we made the most of it! Of course Moths were once again on the agenda, a I was granted permission to use traps aeound thr garden, extending to the ridge with a generator if I wanted to. The first few nights were hard going and measly pickings but of course every trap had it's surprises in, and having not been here in August before there were plenty of moths that i'd never seen before. 2 of the traps on the first couple of nights got water-logged and then I had the challenging time of dealing with lively Hornets, albeit they are quite docile once the sun has rose and some mornings I just had to wait for it to get light before I could get near the traps. We also lost one of the bulbs in the lower garden, I woke up to find it glowing green/white and thought it was odd and then getting nearer and realising the bulb had smashed, not good as Robin didn't have a 3-pin spare. How on earth it smashed when we had no rain that night (and it had a secure rainguard on it anyway) is beyond me. I could still see the light in my vision for about 15 minutes after which was slightly worrying! By Saturday and Sunday, nights were really warm and temperatures kept in the high teens some nights even when the sky had cleared and working the traps in the morning (sometimes 4) was pretty hard work to say the least. Potting stuff up I didn't recognise, keeping a list on a notepad, the traps were full up and some mornings each trap had about 400 moths in, and I had 4 running! The best night I had around 160 species which is pretty incredible for August apprarently. This first post I will list the Macro Moths that I saw on my trip. I still have a few for identification as always but so far the Macro Moth species list stands at 193 species. Species highlighted in red are completely new to me. All of the Macro Moth species that I took photos of can now be viewed on my flickr page HERE Adactylotis contaminaria Angle Shades Barred Hook-tip Beautiful Hook-tip Beautiful Marbled Beautiful Yellow Underwing Birch Mocha Bird's Wing Black Arches Black V Moth Blair's Mocha Blood-vein Bordered White Bright-line Brown-eye Brimstone Moth Broad-barred White Broad-bordered Bee Hawk-moth Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Brussels Lace Buff Arches Buff Ermine Buff Footman Buff-tip Burnished Brass Campion Chinese Character Clay Clay Triple-lines Cloaked Carpet Cloaked Minor Clouded Border Clouded Buff Clouded Silver Common Carpet Common Footman Common Rustic Common Wainscot Common Wave Common White Wave Copper Underwing Coronet Coxcomb Prominent Crescent Dart Dark Spectacle Dark Sword-grass Dark-barred Twin-spot Carpet Delicate Dewick's Plusia Dingy Footman Dotted Clay Double-striped Pug Drymonia querna Dumeril's Rustic Dun-bar Dusky Marbled Brown Ear Moth Early Thorn Engrailed Epilecta linogrisea Essex Emerald Eupithecia semigraphata or impurata False Mocha Festoon Figure of Eighty Flame Shoulder Flounced Rustic Four-spotted Footman Foxglove Pug Frosted Yellow Garden Carpet Garden Tiger Gem Grass Emerald Great Dart Green Silver-lines Grey Dagger Gypsy Moth Heart & Dart Hoary Footman Horse Chestnut Humming-bird Hawk-moth Idaea deversaria Idia calvaria Iron Prominent Jersey Emerald Jersey Tiger Knot Grass Large Yellow Underwing Latin Latticed Heath Least Yellow Underwing Leopard Moth Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Lesser Cream Wave Lesser Swallow Prominent Lesser Treble-bar Lesser Yellow Underwing Light Emerald Lime Hawk-moth Lime-speck Pug Lobster Moth Lunar Thorn Lychnis Lythria cruentaria Maiden's Blush Marbled Clover Miller Nutmeg Nut-tree Tussock Oak Eggar Oak Hook-tip Oak Processionary Orache Moth Orange Footman Paidia rica Pale Mottled Willow Pale Oak Beauty Pale Prominent Pale Shoulder Passenger Peach Blossom Peacock Moth Pebble Hook-tip Peppered Moth Phoenix Pigmy Footman Pine Hawk-moth Pine Processionary Pine-tree Lappet Pinion-streaked Snout Plum Lappet Poplar Hawk-moth Poplar Kitten Poplar Lappet Portland Riband Wave Red Twin-spot Carpet Riband Wave Rosy Footman Rosy Marbled Ruby Tiger Rustic Satin Wave Scalloped Hook-tip Scarce Bordered Straw Scarce Footman Scarce Merveille du Jour Scarlet Tiger Scopula tesselaria Scorched Wing Setaceous Hebrew Character Shark Shears Silver-Y Single-dotted Wave Small Angle Shades Small Black Arches Small Blood-vein Small Dusty Wave Small Fan-foot Small Fan-footed Wave Small Mottled Willow Small Purple-barred Small Ranunculus Small Rivulet Small White Wave Snout Speckled Beauty Spotted Sulphur Square-spotted Clay Straw Dot Straw Underwing Swallow Prominent Synopsia sociaria Tawny Prominent Tawny-barred Angle Tephronia sepiaria Toadflax Brocade Treble-bar Tree-lichen Beauty True Lover's Knot Vestal Vine's Rustic Waved Umber White Ermine White-point White-speck Willow Beauty Wood Carpet Yellow Shell Yellow-barred Brindle Yellow-headed Phoenix Yellow-tail
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: Drymonia dodonaea. Date: 03.06.2018. Source: Own work. Author:
AfroBrazilian.
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Exemplar found: Russia, Moscow Oblast, Odintsovsky District, near village Pestovo, 01.05.2018, by light МО, Одинцовский р-н, окрестности деревни Пестово, 01.05.2018, на свет
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Longitude (deg): -1.9. Latitude (deg): 50.9. Longitude (deg/min): 1ð 60' W. Latitude (deg/min): 50ð 60' N. Vice county name: South Wilts. Vice county no.: 8. Country: England. Stage: Imago. Identified by: Bournemouth Natural Sciences Society. Comment: at MV. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Background: pale background. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS600D dSLR with Tamron SP AF Di 90mm Macro 1:1 lens.
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Trip to Las Descargues 26th June - 03rd July - Macro Moths Last week I flew out to Limoges with Roger and Steve and then drove south for just over two hours and arrived at Las Descargues in the Midi-pyrenees just in time for the first night's moth trapping. The weather was warm and muggy when we landed and the further sout we drove, the cloudier and darker it got when all of a sudden the heavens opened and a monsoon was experienced just at the crucial time of trying to find the supermarket for our week's shop! With the rain came wind and plummeting temperatures, in fact the first night's temperature of 17 degrees was to be the highest until Sunday where we managed 19.5c at lower altitude. Most days we were really up against the elements, with persistant rain, wind and even hail the size of 5 pence pieces. Some days the temperature didn't get above 14 degrees, ridiculous to say the least and with lows of 9 we weren't holding out for much. Sods law was that the previous weeks temperatures were between 28 and 37 degrees! Nevertheless we were there to catch Moths, observe Butterflies and watch Birds and on some days when the weather was too grim we enjoyed a good sweep around the grass for Crickets and Grasshoppers! The best nights were the first night that we turned up, completely shattered from travelling and the last night before we had to travel back, not ideal but we just had to make do. Some beautiful species were observed at the traps and we made two trips out (It would have been more had the weather been better, but risk of lightning strikes and electrocution from the wet was too much of a risk) one to the Causse at Dolmen de la Pierre Martin and another to the Verdal Gorge. Robin and Sue were great hosts throughout the whole week and I urge people to book up and have an amazing wildlife experience that is there to offer. I enjoyed it so much that I will be returning very soon. Below are the Macro Moth highlights and some pictures of the traps, weather and scenery. The list currently stands at 192 species of Macro Moth recorded with the best moth an Arctiidae species Dysauxes punctata which we recorded at the Causse and is a very rare moth in the Midi-pyrenees with just records from this single site. More can be found on my flickr site
www.flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/ Species in red are new to me. Alchymist Atypha pulmonaris Barred Hook-tip Bird's Wing Black Arches Black v moth Blair's Mocha Blood-vein Bordered Beauty Bright Wave Brimstone Brindled White Spot Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing Brown-tail Buff Arches Buff Ermine Buff Footman Buff-tip Burnished Brass Campion Caradrina aspersa Chequered Wave Chinese Character Clay fan-foot Clouded border Clouded Silver Common Carpet Common Emerald Common Footman Common Heath Common Rustic Common Wave Common White Wave Coronet Cream Wave Cyclophora lennigiaria Dark Arches Dark Umber Dark-barred Twin-spot Carpet Delicate Dewick's Plusia Dingy Footman Dot Moth Double Kidney Drymonia querna Dun-bar Dwarf Cream Wave Dysauxes punctata Elephant Hawk-moth Engrailed Fan-foot Feathered Beauty Festoon Fiery Clearwing Flame Four-spotted Footman Frosted Orange Frosted Yellow Garden Carpet Garlic Mottled Goat Moth Great Oak Beauty Green silver-lines Grey Dagger Grey-pine Carpet Guernsey Underwing Handmaid Heart and Dart Heart Moth Herald Hoary Footman Hoplodrina Respersa Horse Chestnut Hummingbird Hawk-moth Idaea Deversaria Idaea subsaturata Idia Calvaria Iron Prominent Isle of Wight Wave Jersey Emerald Jubilee Fan-foot July Highflyer Kent Black Arches Knot Grass Lackey L-album Wainscot Lamprosticta Culta Large Dagger Large Emerald Large Yellow Underwing Latin Latticed Heath Least Carpet Least Yellow Underwing Lesser Yellow Underwing Light Arches Light Brocade Light Crimson Underwing Light Emerald Little Thorn Lobster Moth Lunar Thorn Lunar-spotted Pinion Map-winged Swift Marbled Minor Marbled White-spot Minor Shoulder knot Mottled Rustic Mouse Moth Muslin Footman Mythimna sicula Nut-tree Tussock Nyctobrya ravula Oak Hook-tip Oak Nycteoline Olive Crescent Orache Orange Footman Orange Moth Pale Mottled Willow Pale Oak Beauty Pale Shoulder Passenger Peacock moth Pearly Underwing Pebble Hook-tip Peppered Moth Pine Processionary Plum Lappet Poplar Hawk-moth Privet Hawk-moth Purple Bar Red-necked Footman Rhodostrophia calabra Rhodostrophia vibicaria Rosy Footman Rosy Marbled Rustic Sandy Carpet Scarce Bordered Straw Scarce Chocolate-tip Scarce Footman Scarce Hook-tip Scarce Silver-lines Scarlet Tiger Scorched Carpet Scorched Wing September Thorn Setaceous Hebrew Character Shark Shears Silver-Y Single Dotted Wave Small Black Arches Small Dusty Wave Small fan-footed Wave Small Marbled Small Mottled Willow Small Phoenix Small purple-barred Small Ranunculus Small White Wave Snout Southern Buff-tip Spanish Character Speckled Footman Speckled Yellow Spotted Sulphur Spurge Hawk-moth Sub-angled Wave Swallow Prominent Sycamore Tawny Wave Tephronia cremiaria Three-humped Prominent Toadflax Brocade Treble bar Treble Brown Spot True Lover's Knot Turnip Moth Uncertain Vapourer Varied Coronet V-pug Waved Umber Weavers Wave White Satin White Speck White-point Willow Beauty Yellow Shell Yellow-tail
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Exemplar found: Russia, Moscow Oblast, Odintsovsky District, near village Pestovo, 20.06.2018, by light МО, Одинцовский р-н, окрестности деревни Пестово, 20.06.2018, на свет
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adult..
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Summary[
edit] Description: Drymonia querna English: The Oak Marbled BrownPolski: Dąbrówka dębowa. Date: 22 July 2015. Source: Own work. Author:
Jerzy Strzelecki.